Use of other words to describe a specific word or idea which cannot be remembered
A circumlocution is a way of saying or writing something using more words than are necessary instead of being clear and direct. the practice of using too many words to express an idea, instead of saying it directly
speaking around a point rather than getting to it, such as S T Coleridge's "twice five miles of fertile ground" in "Kubla Khan " Also known as periphrasis
The use of indirect or roundabout language The use of more words than necessary as a means of avoiding a simple direct expression
the use of indirect language or roundabout expressions; evasion in speech or writing See also: cledonism, periphrasis
\sir-kum-lo-KYOO-shun\, noun: The use of many words to express an idea that might be expressed by few; indirect or roundabout language; a periphrase